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Where to stream Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom in the UK

Jason Momoa, Amber Heard and Patrick Wilson are back for the underwater DC sequel

Jason Momoa in Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom
Jason Momoa reprises his role as Aquaman in the DC sequel. (Warner Bros.)

If you thought that DC Studios was going to ignore the monster success of its billion-dollar 2018 smash Aquaman you were wrong.

Despite delays, and a couple of fun horror excursions, James Wan is back helming the king of Atlantis in a brand new film.

Aquaman was one of DC’s more successful films with audiences and critics, mixing big action with a fun, adventure tone and the occasional jump scare to remind us Wan is also a great horror filmmaker.

Read more: Every upcoming DC movie

Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom appears to be the final DCEU film before the new slate of the DCU comes into play, so here is everything you need to know about the sequel.

Where can I stream Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom?

Patrick Wilson and Jason Momoa in Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom
The film is available to watch from home in the UK now. (Warner Bros.)

Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom will be available to buy and rent from Prime Video, Apple TV and Sky Store from 5 February. Then on 18 March, the film will be available to own on 4K UHD, Blu-ray and DVD from online and physical retailers.

Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom arrived in UK cinemas in December 2023, hoping to get into people’s hearts over the Christmas holidays.

What are the reviews like?

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as Black Manta in Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom
Yahya Abdul-Mateen II plays Black Manta. (Warner Bros.)

Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom has finally surfaced but will it make waves or is the DCEU's final film dead in the water? Having experienced many delays and lots of on and off-set turmoil, fans were eager to see how DC’s current cinematic offering would end.

Well, as it turns out, it might be a case of “be careful what you wish for”.

The Telegraph certainly didn’t hold back, calling James Wan’s sequel “the most numbingly moronic film of 2023”. Critic Robbie Collin added: “Some films are so stupid you can swear individual brain cells are dying as you watch them. Then there is Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom, during which it felt like entire clumps of grey matter were giving up the gig in disgust and abseiling out of my ears.”

Meanwhile, The Independent said: “The Lost Kingdom speaks too fluently to [the DCEU’s] failures to not feel like a damning indictment on its legacy,” with Digital Spy reminding readers that “the sequel caps a dire 2023 for DC movies” following the lacklustre performances of Shazam! Fury of the Gods and Blue Beetle.

Read more reviews below:

The Telegraph: The most numbingly moronic film of 2023 (3-min read)

The Independent: Brainless finale to DC’s universe is a damning indictment on its legacy (3-min read)

Digital Spy: Aquaman 2 is a fittingly messy end to the DCEU (5-min read)

Variety: Jason Momoa in a Sequel That’s 3D but Flat, With Less Screensaver Fun and More ‘Dark’ Action (5-min read)

Is there a trailer for Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom?

There have been a few Aquaman and The Lost Kingdom released, with the most recent coming in November 2023. Watch it below.

“I’m gonna kill Aquaman and destroy everything he holds dear...” fumes Yahya Abdul-Mateen II’s Black Manta in the first full trailer for Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom, and it sounds like he means business.

DC fans finally got to dip their toes into Wan’s Aquaman sequel in mid-September when the studio dropped its debut trailer.

In it, we find Mamoa’s Arthur Curry settling into his new life — one that has finally been given purpose since he embraced his destiny as the new king of Atlantis. However, as with most comic book utopias, peace times don’t last too long and before long, a new evil emerges — one that’ll force Curry to reunite with old enemies in order to beat.

Watch the first trailer for Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom below:

Before it arrived, a teaser trailer for the trailer was revealed in September which showed brief glimpses of the war that will break out over the course of the superhero movie.

Watch the teaser trailer below:

Who is in the cast?

Patrick Wilson as Orm in Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom
Patrick Wilson is back as Orm in Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom. (Warner Bros.)

Aquaman’s sequel would feel empty without Aquaman so luckily Jason Momoa is back as half-human, half-Atlantean Arthur Curry, the king of Atlantis. Also returning from the first film is Amber Heard as Xebel kingdom Princess — and love interest — Mera.

Willem Dafoe is back as royal vizier Nuidis Vulko, and so is Patrick Wilson as Curry’s half-brother and enemy Orm Marius.

Dolph Lundgren returns as Xebel king Nereus, Mera’s father, while Abdul-Mateen II returns as pirate enemy David Kane who adopts an armoured suit making him the Black Manta.

Temuera Morrison and Nicole Kidman reprise their roles as Arthur’s parents Thomas and Atlanna respectively, while Randall Park is back as Atlantis obsessive science Dr Stephen Shin.

Pilou Asbæk is Kordax, while Vincent Regan is Atlan, the first king of Atlantis. Indya Moore portrays Karshon, and Jani Zhao plays Stingray.

What is the plot?

Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as Black Manta in Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom. (Warner Bros.)
Yahya Abdul-Mateen II as Black Manta in Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom. (Warner Bros.)

The official synopsis for Aquaman: The Lost Kingdom explains: “Having failed to defeat Aquaman the first time, Black Manta, still driven by the need to avenge his father’s death, will stop at nothing to take Aquaman down once and for all.

"This time Black Manta is more formidable than ever before, wielding the power of the mythic Black Trident, which unleashes an ancient and malevolent force. To defeat him, Aquaman will turn to his imprisoned brother Orm, the former King of Atlantis, to forge an unlikely alliance. Together, they must set aside their differences in order to protect their kingdom and save Aquaman’s family, and the world, from irreversible destruction.”

What happened behind the scenes?

The first look at Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom was shared during FanDome 2021. (DC/Warner Bros.)
The first look at Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom was shared during FanDome 2021. (DC/Warner Bros.)

According The Hollywood Reporter, Wan’s Aquaman sequel is the only DC movie to have endured three different power changes at Warner Bros. The article also confirmed that three different rounds of reshoots took place — “almost an unprecedented number, even for a movie of this scale.”

According to the same sources, multiple uninspiring test screenings were to blame for these new reshoots, with clarity surrounding the film's core storyline emerging as particular sticking points.

The presence of Batman was also a key area of focus. Originally, Michael Keaton’s Dark Knight was reportedly due to play a role “akin to Samuel L. Jackson’s Nick Fury in the Marvel movies,” popping up in the since-shelved Batgirl alongside an appearance in Aquaman 2.

Release date shifts messed this up slightly, as The Lost Kingdom was originally due to arrive before The Flash, which also included the big return of Keaton’s Bruce Wayne. To fix this issue, previous Warners bosses Michael De Luca and Pamela Abdy invited Ben Affleck’s Batman to replace Keaton — but that scene was since been ditched too.

The Hollywood Reporter claims this decision was made by new DCEU bosses James Gunn and Peter Safran who “do not want to promise a movie universe that will not come to fruition, nor tie it down excessively to past failures.” According to an anonymous source, it was all “pretty chaotic.”

EZRA MILLER as The Flash, MICHAEL KEATON as Batman and EZRA MILLER as The Flash in The Flash. (Warner Bros.)
Ezra Miller and Michael Keaton in The Flash. (Warner Bros.)

Despite all this, Warner Bros.’ dedication to dishing out even more reshoots could suggest they had a lot of faith in the movie, with Wan apparently completing his five days of freshly allotted reshoots in just four.

Despite this semi-positivity surrounding the film, an article that washed ashore from Variety in October detailed a litany of production chaos including drunk stars, “hostile” vibes and even a shouty letter from Elon Musk.

According to the outlet, Momoa allegedly showed up to the set intoxicated while dressed as Johnny Depp, presumably to provoke Heard and add pressure to remove her from the project. Since these allegations have surfaced, DC spokespeople have denied them and claimed otherwise — but the trouble with Wan’s movie doesn’t seem to have stopped there.

In addition to Heard’s claims that Wan was unsupportive of her during production, Variety also claimed that the star was in fact very nearly dropped from the sequel by Warner Bros. — but due to a lack of chemistry with its leading man and not for any other external circumstances.

The article suggested that this didn’t go ahead due to a “scorched Earth” letter by Heard’s ex-partner Musk.

Jason Momoa is allegedly in talks to play Lobo in James Gunn's new DCEU. (credit: DC)
Jason Momoa is allegedly in talks to play Lobo in James Gunn's new DCEU. (credit: DC)

As per Variety: “Ultimately, the studio never pulled the trigger on firing Heard because her former boyfriend, Elon Musk, had one of his litigators send a “scorched-earth letter to Warner Bros. threatening to burn the house down” if the actress wasn’t brought back for a sequel, says a source familiar with the behind-the-scenes battle.”

The article went on to suggest that Momoa might survive the transition from the old DC movie-verse to James Gunn’s currently-in-the-works DC Extended Universe — just not as Aquaman. According to Variety’s sources, Gunn is eyeing him to play alien bounty hunter Lobo instead.

Responding to these claims, Wan told Empire that many of the stories related to the follow-up’s reshoots had largely been blown out of proportion, explaining that the headlines didn't quite match the vibe that he cultivated on set.

“We probably did seven or eight days [of reshoots], which is nothing for a movie of this size,” he told the outlet. “It was just spread out because it’s so hard to get your actors back once you’ve finished the initial shoot.”

He also expressed his frustration at having one of his projects pulled into an online drama that he has little control over. “I’m a pretty private person,” he reasoned. “I don’t get on social media and have fights, but it’s difficult because this narrative has emerged that is not the reality. The noise is fun to write about, and it gets clicks, but people don’t know the truth.”


Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom will be available to rent or buy digitally from 5 February, and on 4K UHD, Blu-ray and DVD from 18 March.